Sunday,
May 29, 2005
An honored guardBY
ALAN BJERGACopurtesy
of the Wichita Eagle

Specialist
Michael Diehl stands at attention in the dress uniform he spent eight hours
preparing. On command, he glides forward toward possibly the world's most
hallowed rubber mat: the one sentinels walk across when guarding the Tomb
of the Unknowns.

CLACK!
A steel plate on his heel snaps against his other heel as he pivots in
unison with his commander and the sentinel he is relieving. A salute. An
order. Diehl takes position at the edge of the 63-foot mat. He marches
21 steps, skimming forward with his head perfectly still, eyes straight
ahead, stone-faced at all times. He turns, faces the tomb for 21 seconds,
turns again, pauses another 21 seconds, then retraces his steps.

Pause
and repeat. He gazes past the tomb, toward the nation's capital. Rain begins
to fall. Diehl is 21. He is far from Hays, Kansas, his hometown.

He
is honoring. And he is honored.

Diehl
is a sentinel at the Tomb of the Unknowns, created after World War I at
Arlington National Cemetery to honor war dead whose remains were never
identified.

The
tomb has come to symbolize the sacrifice of all American soldiers, and
the memorial itself is laden with symbolism and tributes.

In
its crypts lie three veterans, from World War I,World
War II and the Korean War. A Vietnam veteran once buried in the tomb
was removed in 1998, after his remains were identified. Later wars have
not had any truly "unknown" soldiers.

"When
you stand there, you think of how the unknowns represent everyone," Diehl
said. "Someone in the audience is thinking, 'That could be my brother,'
and you realize how important it is to be there."

His
background is common Kansas. He grew up in Hays, graduated from the town's
Catholic high school and joined the military after deciding he wasn't quite
ready for college. He began basic training on April 1, 2003, during the
early stages of the war in Iraq.

His
enlistment "scared me to death," said his mother, Mary Diehl, who still
lives in Hays.

But
Diehl learned about the Tomb Guard Platoon through his recruiter and applied.
He arrived at Arlington in September 2003.

Only
about 20 percent of those who apply end up guarding the tomb. Diehl's assistant
relief commander, Sgt. Adam Dickmyer, said Diehl meets the most important
demand: He has a determination to never give up.

"Everyone
who guards this tomb does it the same way, every minute of every day,"
he said. "If you're not a good person who follows through on what you're
determined to do, you're not going to make it."

Beyond
attitude, guards must have aptitude. They have to be top scorers on Army
skill tests and meet other demanding mental standards. Diehl had to memorize
17 pages of information on the cemetery and the tomb, then write it back
longhand with no more than five mistakes. A missing letter counts as a
mistake.

Finally,
a soldier has to look the part. He or she has to be roughly 5 feet 10 inches
to 6 feet tall and physically fit. The platoon is divided by height into
three groups so that soldiers face each other eye to eye during the changing
of the guard. Diehl is with the 5-foot-11-inch group.

The
day before a shift is spent preparing for the shift. Shoe-polishing and
uniform maintenance can take up to eight hours, Diehl said.

The
guarding itself can be demanding. Most guards at some point try an "Iron
Man" shift, taking turns guarding with one other sentinel and standing
for 22 hours in a 24-hour day.

After
nine months as a guard, sentinels qualify for the Tomb Guard Identification
Badge, which has been awarded to fewer than 600 soldiers since the 1950s.
Diehl is No. 529.

The
badge is the second-least awarded in the military after the astronaut's
badge. It can be revoked even after the soldier retires for actions that
discredit the tomb.

That
has created a folklore about allegedly rigid conduct standards -- how sentinels
can never swear or drink alcohol. But on their days off, they are the same
as any other off-duty soldiers.

"These
are good boys, but they're not saints," said Mary Diehl. And despite their
efforts to be as uniform as possible, they're individual human beings.

"I
know the service can be hard on them," she said. The marching style "has
been murder on Michael's knees."

Michael
Diehl said he'd be lying if he said he hadn't thought about taking a different
assignment, rather than one where gliding 22 steps down a mat instead of
21 would be considered a form of disrespect.

The
key, he said, is to not think of it as pressure.

"I
look at it as something I do because I enjoy doing it. If I looked at it
as a responsibility, it would be much tougher to do."

Diehl's
enlistment runs out this fall. He hasn't decided yet what he'll do. He's
the second of four children, with an older brother at the University of
Kansas law school. His dad is a lawyer too.

If
Michael decides to go back to school, he will be much more focused, his
mother said.

"No
matter what he chooses, he's been able to do something pretty special,"
she said. "That will help him in whatever he does."

Ever
observant

Diehl
said the experience of guarding the unknowns has taught him much about
service, and about the dedication people feel to those who have died before
them.

A soldier,
even one at attention, can observe a lot while standing and marching for
30 minutes, following the same words, same motions and same tradition followed
over decades. It's touching at times, Diehl said, though guards aren't
allowed to show emotion.

"One
afternoon there was an old veteran in a wheelchair with an oxygen tank,"
he said. "At the beginning of the changing of the guard the person changing
the guard will say it's requested that everyone stand and stay silent.

"Obviously
we know there are certain people who won't be able to stand up, and I'm
seeing this guy and thinking, 'He's not going to stand up.' But this guy
did everything in his power to stand up, and he stood up through the whole
ceremony.

"He
was with his family. They were telling him to stay seated, but he wouldn't
listen to them. You stand at attention the whole time, but you know what's
happening.

"That's
when you remember what you're doing."

A soldier
approaches to relieve Diehl. Another changing of the guard is about to
begin. Rain falls over the cemetery. The soldier is dismissed and returns
to his barracks, eyes straight ahead, stone-faced at all times.

HOW
TO

WALK
THE MAT

Guards
follow meticulous rituals when watching over the graves:

The
soldier walks 21 steps across the tomb. This alludes to the 21-gun salute,
which is the highest honor given any military or foreign dignitary.

On
the 21st step, the soldier turns and faces the tomb for 21 seconds.

The
soldier then turns to face the other way across the tomb and changes his
weapon to the outside shoulder.

After
21 seconds, the process is repeated.

This
is repeated until the soldier is relieved of duty at the Changing of the
Guards.

From
April 1 to Sept. 30, the guard is changed every half hour. From October
1 to March 31, the guard is changed every hour.